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Godiva goes green while printing gold

Godiva trims more than 30% of its printing costs by switching from an imported specialty paper to a foil metallic coated paper. Sustainability gains are impressive.

Pw 4678 Godiva R

The gold Godiva box is recognized worldwide as the symbol for the premium chocolates inside. Recently, the chocolatier trimmed more than 30% from the cost of printing wraps and gift boxes by changing from an imported specialty paper to printing with MiraFoil® metallic coating from Henkel Corp. 

“Godiva asked us to match a specialty paper from Europe that was very, very expensive,” said John Giusto, senior vice president of manufacturing at Curtis Packaging. “Their primary motivation was cost. The specialty material was at least twice the cost of alternatives. It was a gravure process that used expensive additives and materials from an exclusive supplier to achieve the gold color Godiva wanted.”

Perfecting the process

Curtis Packaging was up to the task. As it so happened, Curtis is also a leader in the use of MiraFoil technology (marketed as CurtChrome by Curtis)—a UV-curable alternative to foil board laminating and hot foil stamping that is equally brilliant as foil. In fact, by the time Godiva challenged Curtis to duplicate the effect, the converter had already established a solid history and knowledge base with MiraFoil technology.

“We purchased a KBA  8/C offset printing press in 2004 with a front-end flexo coater to handle exotic coatings, such as titanium dioxide white, dispersion silvers, and pearls,” says Giusto. “Although small-format presses were being sold to do this at the time, no one had mastered their capabilities nor attempted it on a large-format press. Plus, original dispersion silvers were infrared-dried and not UV-cured. You’d lay down the silver first, try to print on it, and get an uneven mottled result due to the dispersion silver not being dry.”

So Giusto and his team converted the press to UV flexo. “We have a drying stub after the coater. We worked with Air Motion Systems, who manufactured the UV drying system and engineered the conversion,” he says. “Then we wanted to see if we could get UV silver to work because a large percentage of our work was done on foil. We wanted an environmentally friendly alternative, but we also wanted to give our customers the opportunity for cost savings. We knew that if we could get a dispersed silver to work, we could spot print it where needed, and that would save our customers money.”

Dennis Drummond, who is senior key account manager at Henkel, suggested the MiraFoil UV-curable silver dispersion. For six months, Giusto, Drummond, and Albert Lin, PhD, who is Henkel’s technical director, worked to perfect the process.

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